Ten drivers for five Chase spots leads to Richmond free-for-all

RICHMOND, Va. — At Richmond International Raceway, the intensity level runs high for those drivers battling for the final few spots still available to the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. But beneath all that pressure and anxiety, there’s an undercurrent of a very different emotion.

Belief.

Saturday night’s regular-season finale on the three-quarter-mile short track promises to be a free-for-all, with 10 drivers still technically eligible for the five playoff spots not yet claimed. Some of those contenders harbor more realistic hopes than others, but to many, expectations do not stop at simply wedging their way into the Chase field. Most of these bubble boys firmly believe they can win the entire thing.

Hope springs eternal, even for those drivers resigned to clawing their way in.

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“None of us would be here if we didn’t think we could win every week,” said Martin Truex Jr. “I race to win; I don’t race for top 10s. That’s what we all do. That’s what got us there. That’s why we’re here. All the teams that are challenging to get in the Chase right now have the potential if they get hot, get on a streak, get that momentum that we all the time talk about. Where does it come from? How do you get it? Nobody can explain it. A team can go on a roll, win a championship. It’s 10 races. You got to be perfect. Somebody’s going to do it.”

Jimmie Johnson, Clint Bowyer, Kevin Harvick, Carl Edwards, Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth have clinched top-10 spots in the playoff, and Kasey Kahne has secured at least a Wild Card. That leaves five positions still up for grabs, and 10 drivers mathematically eligible: Truex, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Joey Logano, Greg Biffle, Kurt Busch, Jeff Gordon, Ryan Newman, Brad Keselowski, Jamie McMurray and Paul Menard.

Those latter three, though, are statistical long shots, drivers who need to win the race and have bad things befall several other hopefuls to have any chance to get in. Conversely, Earnhardt needs only a 32nd-place finish to wrap up his place in the top 10. So barring events unlikely or unforeseen, the most realistic scenario involves six drivers — Logano, Biffle, Busch, Gordon, Truex and Newman — vying for four available spots.

Next weekend at Chicagoland, though, the emphasis changes from trying to get into the Chase to trying to win it. Toward that end, there’s no shortage of optimism even among drivers who risk being on the outside looking in at the conclusion of 400 miles on Saturday night.

“We can contend. I’m optimistic about it,” Busch said. “We posted great numbers all season. We have a test session left that will allow us to prepare at a track that might be a good track for us, to get even better, or use that test session on a track that I know I struggle on in those final 10 weeks. … I think we hit another boost of speed when we came back to all these tracks a second time. Since then, like at Pocono earlier this year we finished seventh, second race third. Michigan we wrecked in the first race, but we came back and finished third again. Those are the finishes that it’s going to take to run well in the Chase. When you’re talking about third, sixth, fourth like last week — those are the numbers that stack up to give you a shot in the Chase.”

Recent performance backs up that assertion — Busch has finished ninth or better in four of his last five races, and stands 10th in points, even without the benefit of a race win. Another driver on a similar streak is Logano, whose victory at Michigan has anchored a six-week run in which he hasn’t placed worse than eighth. No wonder Keselowski says his Penske Racing teammate would be his favorite to win the title — should Logano get in.

“There’s parts and pieces that you’re developing that you try to time out for the Chase. Obviously we accelerated a lot of that stuff, because we’re as a team not sitting as pretty as we wanted to be,” said Logano, who needs to finish 11th or better Saturday to clinch a spot. “… At the same time, you know, I feel we have some good stuff coming down the pipeline. Everyone is going to pick it up a notch when we get in the Chase. I feel like we picked it up a notch the last few weeks. We have to pick it up another notch to have a shot at it.”

He’s not alone there. Greg Biffle believes the struggle to get into the Chase has obscured what he might be capable of should he get in. “Because of the way we’ve run this season, (people) have quite possibly underestimated the possibility of us contending for the win,” said Biffle, who has a victory this season and can clinch a Chase spot with a finish of ninth or better.

“You would look at the bottom, maybe seventh- through 12th-place guys and say they probably don’t have as good a chance as the first through (sixth),” he said. “That has some weight to it. Last year we came in leading the points here at Richmond. This year, we’re ninth. But I almost feel like we’re in better position this year car‑wise, competition‑wise, than we were last year. Well‑documented, we’ve struggled this season with this (Generation-6) car. As kind of a whole organization, we haven’t been as strong as we had been last year. I think we’re getting it figured out.”

Even the drivers on the absolute fringe think they’re capable of bigger things. “We’ve proven we can win. Everybody says you have to be a winner to be a champion. I don’t know that’s necessarily the case, but obviously it does help,” said Newman, 14th in points, who needs a win Saturday and some other things to happen. “I mean, I’m not going to sit here and say, ‘Yeah, I think we can win it, I know we can win it.’ I think we can be a true contender and shake some things up.”

Gordon, in 11th place, is in a similar spot. But he remembers how he made the Chase last year, recording a miracle runner-up finish at Richmond to claim the final playoff spot by three points over Kyle Busch. The momentum generated that night propelled him into the next week, where he was running fourth before his car’s throttle stuck and he hit the wall.

“When we did it like we did it last year, whoa, that was awesome,” Gordon said. “It’s all about your car at that track, at that moment. You could have the worst year you’ve ever had and hit it. We’ve seen that happen this year with different teams, where they just hit it. All of a sudden it’s like, ‘Where did they come from? How did they win that race?’ It can happen to anybody, and it certainly can happen to us.”

It can happen to anybody. When it comes to the championship, that’s the hope these Chase bubble boys are clinging to — even if there are no guarantees they’ll actually make the Chase.

“You have to get in there and do your best,” Earnhardt said. “I think we’re all capable of doing a good job, and everybody’s capable of winning the championship.”

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Regan Smith will stand in for Johnson during practice, qualifying

RICHMOND, Va. — For Jimmie Johnson, it all unfolded without a hitch — both the birth of the five-time NASCAR champion’s second daughter, and the plans his No. 48 team had to put a substitute driver in the car.

Johnson and his wife Chandra announced Friday that the couple had welcomed their second child, a daughter born at 2:02 a.m. in Charlotte, N.C. The new arrival, named Lydia Norriss, weighed 5 pounds 10 ounces and was 19 inches long. Both mother and daughter were doing fine, according to a press release, and would remain in the hospital overnight.

Genevieve Marie Johnson meets her sister, Lydia Norriss. (Courtesy @JimmieJohnson)

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Johnson, meanwhile, remained in Charlotte with his family on Friday while his crew went ahead with preparations for Saturday night’s event at Richmond International Raceway, the final contest before the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup. The team turned to Regan Smith, a Nationwide Series driver for JR Motorsports — which is affiliated with Johnson’s Hendrick Motorsports outfit — who would practice and qualify the No. 48 car for the five-time champion, who planned to arrive in time for Saturday’s race.

“This has been the plan all along,” crew chief Chad Knaus said. “We felt like if we went into Loudon weekend, we were going to have some difficulty with the mixed schedule. But we were hoping it was going to come this weekend. We actually tested here a few weeks ago, a company test. Regan came up here and joined us at the test, made some laps in the 48 car. Felt very comfortable in the race car, posted some pretty respectable laps. So it’s actually worked out better than we’d hoped.”

The No. 48 team did have an emergency plan in case Johnson would have been unable to race, but Knaus said that would have gone into effect only if there had been an unforeseen problem or the baby had arrived later than expected. Johnson — who also has a 3-year-old daughter named Genevieve Marie — wanted to be in Richmond for Friday’s activities, Knaus said but in the end common sense won out.

“He’s having a good time, he’s enjoying the moment with Chani,” Knaus said. “He really wanted to be here, but after talking with him last night … it made a lot more sense for him to take the day off and spend some time with Chani. That way when he shows up here tomorrow night, he’s actually fresh and ready to go instead of sleep-deprived and wanting to be with his kid.”

Johnson holds a 28-point lead over Clint Bowyer in the Sprint Cup standings. Although he has four race victories to Matt Kenseth’s series-leading five, a win in Richmond would make him the top overall Chase seed because he has more runner-up finishes — which is the tiebreaker — than the Joe Gibbs Racing driver.

Getting there, though, is made slightly more complicated with Smith wheeling the car in qualifying Friday. The driver change when Johnson returns means the No. 48 will have to start at the rear of the field Saturday night. Johnson has three career victories at Richmond, the most recent coming in 2008. His average starting position at the .75-mile track is 12.7.

“As poorly as we’ve qualified here, I don’t think the implications will be too bad,” Knaus said. “We start toward the rear typically anyhow. We’re going to go out there, we’re going to qualify as best as we can so we get a solid pit selection, and we’ll have to start at the rear of the field tomorrow. We’ve got 400 laps to try and work our way up there. I’m very confident with it. Regan is actually a fantastic qualifier, we’ve seen that time and time again. So … get a good pit pick and go out there and race.”

Richmond also comes amid a rough stretch for a No. 48 team that hasn’t finished better than 28th in its last three starts. Johnson’s points lead was once big enough that he talked about potentially skipping the Richmond race altogether for the birth of his new baby. Problems the past three weeks subverted that plan, but Knaus said confidence is still high on the eve of the Chase.

“If it was ever to happen, it was a great time for it to happen, and we’re looking forward to the next 11 weeks. We feel like out race cars are fast every weekend, we’ve qualified well, we’ve run very fast in backup cars. So we feel like we’ve got the packages we need, we just need to get out there and try to not have these silly problems,” Knaus said.

“You don’t really focus on that stuff as much ass everybody else does. We focus on how the team is performing, what we’re capable of doing, and how we’re going to approach the situation. And right now we’re coming in with our heads high and our shoulders back, and we’re ready to go. We feel very confident that we’ve got a great race team, and great race cars, and a great driver, and we can go out there and race our way to this championship.”

And Johnson is certainly buoyed by the birth of his new daughter. Knaus said he was receiving text messages all night long as his driver kept him abreast of developments in Charlotte.

“Healthy, all her fingers and all her toes, and all that stuff looks good,” the crew chief said of the new arrival. “Chani’s doing great, and they’re recovering, and hopefully they’ll be home tomorrow.”

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Keselowski wins in historic 1,000th Nationwide Series race; Scott leads 240 laps

Related: Full race results | Updated standings | Complete coverage from Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. — You can call Brad Keselowski the heartbreaker.
 
Unlike the antagonist in the Rolling Stones’ hit song by that name, Keselowski broke Brian Scott’s heart with a 22 — his No. 22 Ford Mustang, to be precise.
 
Grabbing the lead for the first time after a restart on Lap 240, Keselowski subsequently survived a seventh caution and a final restart to beat Scott, the Coors Light Pole Award winner, to the finish line by 1.946 seconds in Friday night’s Virginia 529 College Savings 250, the 1,000th race in NASCAR Nationwide Series history.
 
With a dominant car and excellent work by his pit crew, Scott had led the first 239 of 250 laps before Keselowski grabbed the lead from the outside lane on the next-to-last restart and held it the rest of the way.

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The victory was Keselowski’s fifth in 12 starts this season and the 25th of his career. Regan Smith ran fourth, followed by Kyle Busch and Trevor Bayne. Series points leader Sam Hornish Jr. finished sixth.
 
"This was one of those nights where it just didn’t work out for him," Keselowski said of Scott’s attempt to win his first Nationwide race. "The only thing that I can really tell him, with the experience that I have, is that sometimes in racing you do everything right, and you still don’t win. This sport’s very fickle like that.
 
"Things just didn’t fall his way. That yellow that came out (on Lap 229) just put him in a position that didn’t suit his team’s strengths, and it did suit ours, and we were close enough to capitalize."
 
Specifically, Keselowski cashed in on his knack for anticipating and controlling restarts. Scott had issues with the final two, the first of which cost him the lead and second of which sealed the win for Keselowski. Scott asserted that the 2010 Nationwide champion beat him to the line on the penultimate restart and took off early — before reaching the prescribed restart zone — on the last one.
 
"On the last restart, I was shocked," Scott said. "We weren’t even to the entrance to pit road, and he started going, which was two or three car-lengths before the restart zone, and he had me cleared before we even got to the exit of the restart zone (indicated by a red line on the wall).
 
"One, it took away a possibility for our team and everybody at Richard Childress Racing to contend for that win, and two, it eliminated what could have been an exciting race for the fans, if we could have been side by side going into the first corner and racing the way racing should be at these short tracks."
 
Understandably, Keselowski had a different view of the final restart.
 
"I think I just caught him off guard," Keselowski said. "The restart box is a zone, and we went right at the start of it and didn’t give him a second to catch up. That probably wasn’t the key to the victory, but it sure didn’t hurt."
 
Scott dominated from the outset while Keselowski worked his way toward the front. By the time Keselowski cleared Busch for the second position on Lap 195, Scott held a lead of more than 1.5 seconds over the No. 22 Ford. But slowly, inexorably, Keselowski began to close on Scott’s No. 2 Chevrolet.
 
By Lap 210, the margin was .823 seconds. After Scott worked traffic on Lap 217, his advantage shrank to .428 seconds, roughly three car-lengths. But Scott pulled away to a lead of more than a second before caution for Hal Martin’s brush with the wall slowed the race on Lap 229.
 
Hornish expanded his series lead to 16 points over second-place Austin Dillon, who ran 12th Friday, and holds a 26-point advantage over Smith in third.

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Driver now has at least one pole in 21 consecutive seasons

Related: Saturday night’s lineup | Chase explained: Who’s in, on bubble

RICHMOND, Va. — Whether or not Jeff Gordon can find another "Hail Mary" in his No. 24 Chevrolet, he’s off to the sort of start he needs this weekend to secure a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup.
 
Gordon, however, didn’t put much distance between himself and his chief rival for one of the five remaining berths in NASCAR’s 10-race playoff. Kurt Busch qualified second and will take the green flag in Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 from the outside of the front row.
 
The 33rd driver to make a qualifying attempt as the shadows on the .75-mile track were starting to lengthen, Gordon circled the speedway in a track-record 20.674 seconds (130.599 mph), dislodging Busch from the top spot.

The driver of the No. 78 Chevrolet, who went out fifth under benefit of cloud cover, had matched the mark of 130.334 mph Matt Kenseth had set in April 2013.

GORDON’S COORS LIGHT
POLE RECORD

Poles by track: Charlotte (8); Martinsville (7); Richmond (6); Bristol, Michigan, Sonoma (5); Dover, New Hampshire (4); Darlington, Daytona, Indianapolis, Phoenix, Talladega (3); Atlanta, Auto Club, Pocono, Rockingham, Texas, Watkins Glen (2); Chicago, North Wilkesboro (1)

Active tracks where he has yet to win a pole: Las Vegas, Kansas, Kentucky, Homestead-Miami 

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Reigning series champion Brad Keselowski, in desperate need of a victory to keep his waning Chase hopes alive, qualified third at 130.158 mph. Clint Bowyer (130.020 mph) was fourth fastest, followed by Kenseth (129.864 mph).
 
The Coors Light Pole Award was Gordon’s first of the season, his sixth at Richmond and the 73rd of his career — putting him third on the all-time list. Gordon’s qualifying run gave him at least one pole in 21 consecutive seasons, breaking a record he shared with NASCAR Hall of Famer David Pearson.
 
Gordon, who rallied from a lap down to edge Kyle Busch for the final Chase spot in last year’s regular-season finale at Richmond, is one of seven drivers who can secure a Chase spot with a victory. Busch can do the same.
 
"It’s not very often you get to break a record David Pearson set, so that’s really incredible," Gordon said. "I’m pretty overwhelmed and blown away by that record itself and being able to accomplish that. I didn’t think it was going to happen this year. We just have not been qualifying well…
 
"The car was just driving well, and when I saw Kurt put that good lap up at the beginning, and then I saw that cloud go away, I was a little bit nervous whether we had enough. But on the first lap, the car stuck good, and I knew that I had a little bit more in me for the second lap, and it did all the things I wanted it to."
 
The timing couldn’t have been better for Gordon, who is 11th in the Cup standings without a win this season and trails Busch in 10th by six points.

"That’s huge, to be able to do that at a crucial time, get that No. 1 pit stall (closest to the exit from pit road) and set ourselves up to do what we’re going to have to do here (Saturday)," Gordon said. "It’s going to be tough. It’s going to be a hard fight, and I think we just got that little bit of confidence boost that we need."
 
Adjustments to his car after practice helped Busch secure his eighth front-row starting position of the season, only one of which was a pole.
 
"We made a lot of changes, and it turned out to be a great lap," Busch said. "I didn’t know if it would stick for the pole or not, and we ended up outside pole… It’s cool that we’re on the front row and hanging out up front with Gordon."
 
If Gordon and Busch will battle for a Chase spot, so will Martin Truex Jr. and Ryan Newman, who currently are in a heated struggle for the final wild card position. Truex holds the edge in the matchup by five points and backed that up with an 11th-place run in time trials. Newman qualified 24th.
 
Other drivers fighting for the remaining five Chase berths claimed the following starting spots: Jamie McMurray, seventh; Joey Logano, eighth; Greg Biffle, ninth; and Dale Earnhardt Jr., 14th. Earnhardt can lock up a Chase spot with a finish of 32nd or better without leading a lap.

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Newman knows anything can happen in regular-season finale at Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. — With one race remaining in NASCAR’s Race to the Chase, Ryan Newman finds himself in prime position to make his third Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup since 2006. After a summer of drama Newman is intent on finishing out his tenure with Stewart-Haas Racing as the only representative of the organization in the postseason.

He showed up at Richmond International Raceway this week confident and in good spirits. A win in the No. 39 Quicken Loans Chevrolet would clinch at least a Wild Card position. He’s also still in contention for a guaranteed top-10 points slot considering he’s 20 points behind 10th-place Kurt Busch and 30 points behind eighth-place Joey Logano.

“To me, everything is like an ordinary race weekend,’’ Newman said. “Once the checkered flag drops, it all changes. We have to do the same thing that we wanted to do back in Daytona for the 500, at Phoenix and Vegas, everything else. That is the same task at hand: to win the race.

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“Again, for so many of us, winning answers so many things. A few of us, some people can win and still not make it in. In my position, if I win, I’m in. I can run second and still not make it. It’s just a matter of going out there and seeing how everything falls.”

He continued, “I finished 21st in Bristol, went out of the Wild Card spot to into the Wild Card spot.  Anything can happen in a short-track race.”

Ultimately five of the 12 Chase positions will be decided by 10 drivers in Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400, and like a lot of others, Newman believes that creates a dramatic dynamic. Some people will be more desperate than others.

“I think it all depends on how things go,’’ Newman said grinning. “All it would take would be an hour rain delay and it drives people nuts. I think that totally changes the tempo, the emotion that goes into the start of the race. I’ve seen that happen in the last few years at different race tracks. What happened to these people? Did everybody have too much sugar in the rain delay or what? That can change everything.

“I think there’s a little bit of potential for everything. I think there’s a chance it could be calm, a chance it could be caution after caution after caution, a chance that could be the exact same scenario in the entire same race twice. It could be a couple long runs, then four cautions in a row, or vice versa.’’

Emotional highs and lows are certainly something Newman is familiar with considering he found out on July 14 that he wouldn’t be back with SHR, then won one of the most prestigious races on the circuit, the Brickyard 400 at Indianapolis two weeks later.

He has been safely in the Chase field one week and fallen out the next week, but Newman is at least comfortable and optimistic when it comes to racing at Richmond.

Newman won here in 2003 with crew chief Matt Borland, who he reunited with this season. His 11.6 average finish the past eight years at the three-quarter mile track is easily best among the other drivers he must out-run to get in the Chase, and is among the top-six best in the field.

“I’ve been stuck in this spot so many times in my career over the last five or six years, I’m kind of used to it,’’ Newman said. “I’ve made it. I’ve missed it. I know the highs and lows of both of them.

“Yeah, it’s a little bit of a reward (to be in this position) knowing how we started with two DNFs in the first three races. To finish fifth in Daytona, two DNFs, then struggle with some tires at Martinsville, rebounded after losing my job, so to speak, with a win and a track record and pole at Indy. … There’s been highs and lows throughout the season. That can happen four different times Saturday night.’’

Although Newman was coy this week about confirming his plans for 2014, he said an announcement was imminent.

“I spent some time this week working on next year, which I can’t really talk anything about,’’ Newman allowed. “I also spent a lot of time around my farm. It was the first week we’ve had no rain. I was actually able to do some of the things I wanted to get done.

“To me that helps balance out some of the mental sanity of dealing with next year, dealing with this year. I think everybody has to have that in some shape or form.’’

A win Saturday wouldn’t hurt either.

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Scott will share front row with Kenseth

Related: Full qualifying results

RICHMOND, Va. — Brian Scott emerged with the pole position for Friday night’s Virginia 529 College Savings 250 after clocking a lap at 124.327 mph at Richmond International Raceway.

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Scott’s first Coors Light Pole Award of the season was the second of his career and first on the .75-mile track. He’ll start first in the No. 2 Richard Childress Racing Chevrolet in Friday night’s 250-lapper, the 1,000th event in the history of the NASCAR Nationwide Series.
 
Scott made highlights here in April when a late-stages skirmish with Nelson Piquet Jr. spilled over onto pit road, with Scott on the receiving end of a kick below the belt. There will be some early distance between the two this time around; Piquet qualified 16th in the 40-car field.
 
Sprint Cup Series regular Matt Kenseth will share the front row with Scott in Friday night’s 250 (7:30 p.m. ET, ESPN) after turning the second-fastest lap (124.292 mph) in Friday afternoon qualifying in the No. 18 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota. Austin Dillon, Scott’s RCR teammate in the No. 3 Chevy, was third-fastest at 124.218 mph.
 
Brad Keselowski was fourth-fastest with series points leader and Penske Racing teammate Sam Hornish Jr. completing the top five.
 
Jamie McMurray, making his first Nationwide Series start of the season in the No. 5 JR Motorsports Chevy in place of Kasey Kahne, qualified 14th.
 
Danny Efland, Carl Long, Morgan Shepherd, Derrike Cope and Brett Butler failed to qualify.

 

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Keselowski leads with race setups; Gordon takes session with qualifying setups

Related: Full practice results | Follow qualifying, 5:35 p.m. ET

RICHMOND, Va. – Defending NASCAR Sprint Cup Series champion Brad Keselowski, attempting to race his way into this year’s Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, led Friday’s practice session at Richmond International Raceway.
 
The Penske Racing driver’s best lap of 127.083 mph was nearly two mph faster that than of Clint Bowyer (Michael Waltrip Racing), who was No. 2 on the board at 125.821.

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Joe Gibbs Racing teammates Kyle Busch and Matt Kenseth were third and fourth, while four-time Cup champion Jeff Gordon was fifth.
 
Completing the top 10 were Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Kasey Kahne, Ryan Newman and Kevin Harvick.
 
The Federated Auto Parts 400, race No. 26 on the season, is scheduled for Saturday night at 7:30 ET (ABC).
 
Regan Smith, subbing for five-time champ Jimmie Johnson, was 11th in the two-hour session. Johnson remains in Charlotte, N.C., where his wife gave birth to the couple’s second child earlier this morning. Johnson, the series’ points leader, will start at the rear of the field due to the driver change.
 
In the day’s final 45-minute practice, Gordon was fastest at 127.292 mph as teams made the switch from race to qualifying setups.
 
Kyle Busch, Earnhardt Jr., Martin Truex Jr., and Jeff Burton completed the top five.
 
Kahne, Juan Pablo Montoya, Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Mark Martin were sixth through 10th, respectively. Smith was 22nd.

 

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Kenny Wallace is second in only tune-up before Friday’s qualifying

Related: Full practice results

RICHMOND, Va. — Parker Kligerman set the early pace in NASCAR Nationwide Series practice at Richmond International Raceway with a fast lap of 124.792 mph in his Kyle Busch Motorsports Toyota.
 
The NNS series kicked off this weekend’s activities with a two-and-a-half hour opening practice under sunny skies at the 0.75-mile facility. Friday night’s Virginia 529 College Savings 250 is scheduled to begin at 7:30 ET (ESPN).

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Kenny Wallace (RAB Racing) was second fastest in the session at 124.115 mph. Forty-five drivers will be vying for 40 spots later today when qualifying gets underway.
 
Rounding out the top five were Sprint Cup Series regular Matt Kenseth (JGR), Kyle Larson (Turner Scott Motorsports) and Trevor Bayne (Roush Fenway Racing).
 
Sixth through 10th were Austin Dillon, Justin Allgaier, Brian Scott and Sam Hornish Jr. Hornish (Penske Racing) and Dillon (Richard Childress Racing) are 1-2 in the points standings, with the Penske driver entering tonight’s race with a 10-point advantage.
 
Elliott Sadler (JGR), third in points, was 18th.

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Track seems to have driver’s number

Related: Full race results | Updated standings | Complete coverage from Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. — At least Brian Scott was able to joke slightly about what he called “a bittersweet love affair” with Richmond International Raceway.

“Yep. Kicked me in the nuts again, metaphorically,” Scott said after coming up just one position shy of his first NASCAR Nationwide Series victory in Friday night’s Virginia 529 College Savings 250. “It’s unfortunate.”

In April, Scott finished 20th at the 0.75-mile short track, but was the center of attention after his skirmish with Nelson Piquet Jr. evolved into a pit-road scuffle that saw him on the receiving end of a kick below the belt. Friday, the post-race feeling was apparently similar.

Scott — who had led only 38 laps in the previous 133 starts in his Nationwide career — won the Coors Light Pole Award in Friday afternoon qualifying and set a record by leading the first 239 of 250 laps, only to have a late caution period erase what was shaping up to be a wire-to-wire breakthrough victory. But the driver of the Richard Childress Racing No. 2 Chevrolet fell victim to a pass on a late-race restart from eventual race winner Brad Keselowski.

Scott and team owner Childress called NASCAR’s decision to let the winning pass stand into dispute, claiming that Keselowski’s No. 22 Penske Racing Ford may have beaten Scott’s car to the start/finish line. But that restart, and the next one where the RCR crew claimed Keselowski possibly jumped, stood for the final result.

At the end, a disappointed Scott said he had to learn from the experience.

“Obviously, it was really neat to get the pole for the 1,000th Nationwide race and it would’ve been really cool to lead every lap,” Scott said. “Unfortunately, though, there’s just some things I disagree with at the end from procedure calls that I guess I need to figure out. … I’ll learn from it, and I promise I won’t lose another one like that again.”

Series director Wayne Auton, stationed just outside the Nationwide Series hauler, said Scott asked to speak to him post-race concerning the final two restarts in the last 11 laps. Auton said the pair had a “very good conversation” and shook hands as they parted ways.

“I think if you look at the first one that Brian Scott talked to us about, we’ve told competitors for a long time, we’re not going to micromanage the restarts at any time when it comes to the line,” Auton said. “The cars are side by side and they came across the line and we’re not going to micromanage that part of it.

“The last restart, you know we make hundreds of judgment calls all the time during a race. We look at every area that we can and the call that we made on the last one, it was another one of those thousand judgment calls that we make a day and we felt like it was the right call at the time.”

Keselowski, the beneficiary of the late restart, likened NASCAR’s position to a football referee trying to make a definitive call on a nebulous pass interference play. Even though he emerged with the trophy, he still sympathized with Scott’s situation.

“It was probably his best race ever and he’s got a lot to be proud of, that’s for sure,” said Keselowski, who was 1.946 seconds ahead of Scott at the checkered flag. “This is one of those nights where it didn’t work out for him. The only thing I can really tell him with the experience that I have is that sometimes in racing, you do everything right and you still don’t win. This sport’s very fickle like that. There are three things I talk about all the time — speed, execution and luck. You can only control two of them.”

After emerging from his still-warm car, it was far too soon for Scott to take too much solace in matching his career-best finish. Still, he was able to keep composure and reflect on the positives at a track that still seems to have his number.

“I’ve raced a lot of things for a lot of years and about 1 percent of the time do you get a car that dominate,” Scott said. “Just proud of everybody from being able to achieve that, giving us a shot to win and even go out there and lead every lap. …

“I try not to be negative. Obviously we had a great run and good points day, a dominant car. I just need to get some clarification. You know, they always sting any time you lose one, whether you lead one lap or all of them.”

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Confidence has been key in 23-year-old’s renaissance

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RICHMOND, Va. — Joey Logano, eighth in NASCAR’s Sprint Cup Series points standings and one step away from a spot in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, listens to the question.

He does not answer immediately.

At 23 years old, Logano is a three-time winner in the Cup Series. He’s paid well for his ability to push a stock car to the edge.

His team is a mix of veterans and younger players, led by crew chief Todd Gordon. His employer, team owner Roger Penske, is one of the most successful and respected businessmen in racing.

Unless something catastrophic occurs in Saturday night’s Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond International Raceway, Logano will qualify for his first appearance in the series’ 10-race, championship-deciding playoff.

"I always feel like I have something to prove. Not just to everyone else, but to myself."

Joey Logano

He’s not surprised to be in this position (“I was convinced. One hundred percent,” Logano says of preseason expectations), and credits time spent at the shop in the offseason, time spent with Gordon and teammate Brad Keselowski, as well as numerous conversations with Penske as the reason.

“I didn’t have the feeling that I had this year ever before,” Logano says in the quiet of the motorhome lot outside RIR.

He arrived amid much fanfare back in 2009, a kid still stair-stepping his way up through the ranks when he was suddenly handed the keys to a championship-winning car at Joe Gibbs Racing.

He was 18.

After two wins in four years and a best points finish of 16th, Logano and JGR went their separate ways. Some blamed JGR officials for putting him in the car before he was ready. Some simply said Logano didn’t have the talent to make it at the top.

Maybe it was as simple as that — one reason, and one reason only. That’s rarely the case, though.

Penske had an opening. And Logano soon had a new ride.

The question lingers. That “feeling” that he spoke of, was it maturity?

“I feel like I changed as soon as I walked into Penske Racing,” he said. “I feel like I was a different person from then on.

“Todd said … it’s like moving out of your parents’ house and going off to college. You change. It’s kind of weird to say but you’re with this one company for seven years, since you were 17, so it’s kind of like your parents’ house. Then you move out and you’re on your own. When you’re on your own, you better pick it up a notch. You better find something.”

So Logano did. He “hit the reset button,” he said.

“Here’s everything I’ve learned as a person. This is my opportunity to show what I’ve got. It possibly could have been my last, you know, a great opportunity with a great team.”

At Penske, he wasn’t seen as “the little guy, the little kid that started when you were 15 years old. You’re looked at as a man and you’re respected a lot more for that reason. I can take that and run with it. So I was able to do that.”

Series champion Keselowski, still clinging to an outside shot at returning to the Chase to defend his title, said confidence has been the biggest difference for Logano this season.

Based on his teammate’s recent efforts, which include six consecutive top-10 finishes and one win, Logano “would be my favorite to win the championship,” Keselowski said.

“He’s definitely got the momentum. His team has got things going for them in so many different directions. There’s a lot of confidence that comes with that.”

Those on the outside still may see him as just a kid, but inside the garage Logano said he has sensed a change this year. That it’s taken until now, he said, “is my fault.

“I showed them that I’ve basically grown up. And then when you run well …”

Others race him a little differently; his voice carries a little more weight. “You’re a bit more accepted,” he said.

He still has something to prove. No different than when he was tabbed to drive the No. 20 at JGR.

“I couldn’t do it. I don’t know why,” he said. “I just couldn’t.

“I always feel like I have something to prove. Not just to everyone else, but to myself. Not to you or this motorhome lot or fans in the stands. I want to prove it to myself that I’ve got what it takes.”

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